2020 Exhibitors

2020-04-27 11:15:46

271

Brian Korteling

Norwich based award winning artist and curator. Working mainly as a painter but also producing 3D site specific pieces. Brian paints with the aim of capturing the moment. Working both plein air and in the studio his work is varied in style and approach but their is an exploratory thread that unites his work into a cohesive body. Never resting he is constantly evolving and striving to push his paintings into new areas.

Will Teather

“Very clever and beautiful.” BBC News
“Blurring the boundaries of painting and sculpture.” The Guardian
“Teather’s works frequently wrenches us back and forth through time and style; As we are shifted between romanticism and classicism we are left entranced, entertained and certainly captivated by the uncertainties.” Neil Powell, Academic/ Curator

Wild Beasts

Since 2011 Wild Beasts (previously The Underdog gallery) has been an exciting, versatile gallery space in London Bridge, with the vibrant creative hub of Bermondsey Street just around the corner. We deal in artworks by Banksy, Damien Hirst and Anthony Micallef alongside a range of established talents working within urban art and outsider painting.

Claire Cansick

Claire Cansick works from her studio painting landscapes in oil of poignant memories, current affairs and her immediate environment using recessive colours as a starting point.
‘I am inspired by colour and whether it comes from a photo I have taken, real life or the tv I like to challenge reality merging the two in curiously beautiful images’.

Southgate Paintings

I am a contemporary artist and work from my studio in Suffolk. I have always had a passion for the landscape, which has evolved from the love of the outdoors, particularly the fells of the Lake District.
Having always drawn and painted I am now exploring where this will take me. My inspiration has been drawn from various artists, originally enjoying collage and abstract, where early influences were the Cumbrian artist Russell Mills, who in turn was influenced by the German artist Kurt Schwithers.

Lisa Almond

“beautifully atmospheric, creating an ambiance in their presence. Masterly crafted and elegantly finished, her work draws attention from visitors.” Wishing to convey a feeling of peace while exploring colour and movement, award winning international artist Lisa Almond’s interest lies in the unique atmosphere and sense of place provided by new locations and each work conveys some of the essence of the artist’s experience.

Val Bright-Jones

I paint in acrylic, responding to the natural world. Through observational drawings I explore seas, coastlines, geology. Back in my new studio I then paint from memory evoking the multi-sensory experience of being within a place and time. Inevitably the materiality of the paint takes over. The results become semi-abstract or impressionistic rather than representational. Water is a recurrent theme but not exclusive. Figures are added to suggest ambiguity encouraging the viewer to read their own interpretations from my images.

Susanne Mason

Susanne Mason graduated in 1985 in Marburg and Kassel, Germany, as a teacher for Art, German and French. She went on to teach Art and Modern Foreign Languages in Germany and, from 2001, in Norfolk, while at the same time pursuing her drive to paint and engage in creative experiments, such as encaustics. She has pieces in collections of the European Patent Office, Munich, and in private collections in Germany and the UK. Her work has been exhibited in Germany (Marburg and Munich), Norfolk and Southwold.

Kay Barker

Kay Barker’s artwork allows her to express her response to nature and the environment but also lets her work develop and take over from her initial direct response.
In all of Kay’s work a very strong mood is created. This communicates a sense of atmosphere. On a practical level, her work is finely skilled, with a detailed knowledge of the processes that she is using.
Kay has been practising as an artist for over 20 years exhibiting widely throughout Britain and abroad. Her work has been purchased by private and public collections and she is a prize winner in printmaking.

Kate Denton

Kate has been a full time sculptor for 40 years. She trained at Goldsmiths and since then has exhibited widely across the UK and in her native Jersey. Significant amounts of her work are held abroad, especially in the US. Her public commissions include a 7 foot tall running airman at the WW2 airfield in West Malling and a life sized orangutan for the visitor centre of Jersey Zoo. She has completed several hundred private commissions. Kate has a gallery and 7 acre sculpture garden at her home at Lavenham Hall which can be visited by appointment.

John Parker

Turning professional in 1990 John spent his formative years in pursuit of classical accuracy. At the turn of the 21st C. however, John began to focus on a more contemporary style, and after studying at The Norwich University of Art for four years, he succeeded in developing a style of abstract painting symbolic of his life’s personal experiences.
John’s current work shows a blend of the two styles, a contemporary take on the classical goal, traditional materials and technique punctuated with an exciting modern flair.
Influenced by rural surroundings his recent paintings reflect an emotional state rather than pictorial accuracy.

Chrissie Richards

I have been painting since 2010 and am now a full-time professional artist having slowing transitioned from running my own market research business for over thirty years. I divide my time between Suffolk and Hertfordshire. My work is a reflection of my life; it is about all the things that are important to me. Inspiration includes my family, friends, home, travel, animals, communication and love. My work is in several private collections around the world and has twice been selected for the prestigious Society of Women Artists Annual exhibition.

Brian Hodgson

‘My first involvement is as a viewer sensing the creation of atmosphere by the patterns of
light and dark. A recording of this atmosphere is taken via the use of camera and sketches.
The framing and stilling of the scene at a particular moment is an important part of the
creative process. I work with oils as a painting medium because of the feel it brings to the
painting surface with its variety if thickness and colour.’